Some embodiments relate to a device, comprising an amplifier and a linearizer, the linearizer comprising a first transistor, the first transistor comprising a first terminal coupled to an input of the amplifier, a second terminal configured to be coupled to a dc supply voltage, and a control terminal configured to control a current flowing between the first and second terminals and configured to receive a dc bias voltage different from a voltage of the first terminal. Some embodiments relate to a device, comprising an amplifier, comprising an input, an output, and a first set of one or more transistors coupled between the input and the output, and a linearizer, comprising a second set of one or more transistors coupled between a dc supply voltage and the input of the amplifier, wherein the first set of transistors and the second set of transistors have a same topology.
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1. A device, comprising:
an amplifier; and
a linearizer comprising a first transistor, the first transistor comprising:
a first terminal coupled to an input of the amplifier;
a second terminal configured to receive a dc supply voltage transferred to the second terminal from a dc power supply; and
a control terminal configured to control a current flowing between the first and second terminals and configured to receive a dc bias voltage different from a voltage of the first terminal, wherein the dc bias voltage is selectable from among a plurality of dc bias voltages.
10. A device, comprising:
an amplifier, comprising:
an input;
an output; and
a first set of one or more transistors coupled between the input and the output; and
a linearizer, comprising:
a second set of one or more transistors coupled between a dc supply voltage and the input of the amplifier;
wherein the first set of transistors and the second set of transistors have a same topology; and
wherein the second set of one or more transistors is configured to receive the dc supply voltage transferred to the second set of one or more transistors from a dc power supply.
2. The device of
3. The device of
4. The device of
5. The device of
a first terminal coupled to the input of the amplifier;
a second terminal coupled to the first terminal of the first transistor; and
a control terminal configured to control a current flowing between the first and second terminals and configured to receive a dc bias voltage different from a voltage of the first terminal.
7. The device, of
greater than a voltage at the first terminal by at least a threshold voltage of the first transistor and less than a voltage at the second terminal by at least the threshold voltage; or
less than a voltage at the first terminal by at least the threshold voltage and greater than a voltage at the second terminal by at least the threshold voltage.
8. The device of
9. The device of
11. The device of
12. The device of
13. The device of
14. The device of
15. The device of
16. The device of
17. The device of
18. The device of
19. The device of
20. The device of
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This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/629,737, filed Feb. 13, 2018, titled “AMPLIFIER LINEARIZATION AND RELATED APPARATUS THEREOF,” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Power amplifiers are known electronic devices for increasing the power of an Alternating Current (AC) signal. Typically, an amplifier will use electric power from a Direct Current (DC) power supply to multiply a voltage amplitude of an AC signal input to the amplifier by a gain factor, and to provide the multiplied signal as an output.
It is desirable for an amplifier to operate linearly across as wide a range of possible voltage amplitudes as possible. Over an input voltage range in which the amplifier operates linearly, an AC signal output by the amplifier will be proportional to an AC signal input by a gain factor which is constant over the input voltage range. Over an input voltage range in which the gain factor is not constant, the amplifier is operating non-linearly, and such non-linearity may be undesirable.
Some embodiments relate to a device comprising an amplifier and a linearizer. The linearizer may comprise a first transistor, comprising a first terminal coupled to an input of the amplifier, a second terminal configured to be coupled to a DC supply voltage, and a control terminal configured to control a current flowing between the first and second terminals and configured to receive a DC bias voltage different from a voltage of the first terminal.
The DC bias voltage may be selectable from among a plurality of DC bias voltages.
The amplifier may comprise a first transistor having a common-channel terminal configuration.
The amplifier may further comprise a second transistor having a common-control terminal configuration.
The first and second transistors may be field effect transistors (FETs) having common-source and common-gate configurations, respectively.
The linearizer may further comprise a second transistor through which the first transistor is coupled to the input of the amplifier, the second transistor comprising a first terminal coupled to the input of the amplifier, a second terminal coupled to the first terminal of the first transistor, and a control terminal configured to control a current flowing between the first and second terminals and configured to receive a DC bias voltage different from a voltage of the first terminal.
The second terminal may be coupled to an output of the amplifier.
A voltage at the control terminal may be either greater than a voltage at the first terminal by at least a threshold voltage of the first transistor and less than a voltage at the second terminal by at least the threshold voltage, or less than a voltage at the first terminal by at least the threshold voltage and greater than a voltage at the second terminal by at least the threshold voltage.
Some embodiments relate to a device, comprising an amplifier, the amplifier comprising an input, an output, and a first set of one or more transistors coupled between the input and the output, and a linearizer, comprising a second set of one or more transistors coupled between a DC supply voltage and the input of the amplifier, wherein the first set of transistors and the second set of transistors have a same topology.
The first set of transistors and the second set of transistors may each comprise a cascode topology or each comprise a non-cascode topology.
The first set of transistors and the second set of transistors may each comprise a cascode topology, and respective first and second transistors of the first set of transistors may comprise a common-control terminal and a common-channel terminal configuration.
Channels of first and second transistors of the second set of transistors may be coupled to one another between the input of the amplifier and the DC supply voltage.
In some embodiments, the first and second transistors of the first set of transistors may be field effect transistors (FETs) respectively comprising a common-gate and a common-source configuration.
The first set of transistors and the second set of transistors may each comprise a non-cascode topology, and a first transistor of the first set of transistors may comprise a common-channel terminal configuration.
Channel terminals of a first transistor of the second set of transistors may be coupled to the DC supply voltage and to the input of the power supply.
In some embodiments, the first transistor of the first set of transistors may be a field effect transistor (FET) comprising a common-source configuration.
The second set of transistors may be coupled between the input and the output of the amplifier.
The foregoing summary is provided by way of illustration and is not intended to be limiting.
Implementing an amplifier, such as a power amplifier to be used in a radio-frequency (RF) transmission system, may involve compromising between the efficiency and linearity of the amplifier. Amplifiers having better linearity typically offer poor operating efficiency, often dissipating more than half of all operating power into heat rather than into the AC signal output by the amplifier. For example, a class A power amplifier may operate linearly over a significantly wider range of input voltages compared to a class C power amplifier, but with an operating efficiency below 50%, and often even below 10%. Amplifiers having better operating efficiency typically offer poor linearity, having a relatively small range of voltages over which a gain factor of the amplifier is constant. For example, a class C power amplifier may operate with an efficiency as high or higher than 70%, but operates linearly over a significantly decreased range of input voltages compared to a class A amplifier. Thus, selection of an amplifier involves a tradeoff between efficiency and linearity.
The inventors have developed techniques for improving linearity in systems having a non-linear amplifier by compensating the amplifier with a linearizer. The linearizer may be a device coupled to an input of the amplifier and configured to provide a non-constant impedance transfer function for an AC signal received at the input of the amplifier. The non-constant impedance transfer function of the linearizer may compensate for a non-linear response of the amplifier over an input voltage range. For example, if the gain factor of the amplifier is increasing over a particular voltage range due to non-linearity of the amplifier, the impedance transfer function of the linearizer may compensate by decreasing over the voltage range such that an overall linearity of the linearizer together with the amplifier is improved over the voltage range. Thus, a linearizer and amplifier may be implemented in combination with improved overall linearity as compared to the amplifier alone.
Linearizer 110 and amplifier 130 are coupled between inputs 102a and 102b and outputs 104a and 104b. As a non-limiting example, inputs 102a and 102b may be coupled to a baseband-to-RF mixer, and outputs 104a and 104b may be coupled to an RF antenna. AC signals received at inputs 102a and 102b and produced at outputs 104a and 104b may be differential signals, with high side (+) signals received at input 102a and produced at output 104a, and with low side (−) signals received at input 102b and produced at output 104b. Alternatively, the AC signals may be single-ended signals. For example, input 102b and output 104b may not be included or may be connected to a fixed reference voltage.
Amplifier 130 may be configured to multiply a signal received at inputs 102a and 102b by a gain factor and to provide the result to outputs 104a and 104b. Amplifier 130 may include one or more transistors, and the gain factor of amplifier 130 may be set based on a configuration of the transistors such as their positioning and voltage bias condition.
Linearizer 110 may be configured to provide a non-linear shunt impedance for an AC signal received at inputs 102a and 102b of system 100. For example, linearizer 110 may be coupled between inputs 102a and 102b and a DC power supply. AC signals received at inputs 102a and 102b may be conducted to the DC power supply through linearizer 110 such that linearizer 110 provides a shunt impedance for system 100. Linearizer 110 may include one or more transistors, and the non-linear shunt impedance of linearizer 110 may be set based on a configuration of the transistors such as their positioning and voltage bias condition.
In system 100, linearizer 110 and amplifier 130 combine to provide an overall transfer function having improved linearity compared to the gain factor of amplifier 130. When combined, the overall transfer function of system 100 between inputs 102a and 102b and outputs 104a and 104b may be substantially more constant over a range of AC signal voltages than the gain factor of amplifier 130. For example, amplifier 130 may have a non-linear gain factor over a certain range of voltages of the signal received at inputs 102a and 102b. To compensate for the non-linear gain factor of amplifier 130, linearizer 110 may be configured to provide a non-linear impedance such that an overall transfer function between inputs 102a and 102b and outputs 104a and 104b has improved linearity over the certain range of voltages compared to the gain factor of amplifier 130. The gain factor of amplifier 130, the non-linear impedance of linearizer 110, and the overall transfer function of system 100 are described herein including with reference to
Although not shown in
As shown in graph 150, impedance transfer function 154 of linearizer is 110 deviates from constant impedance transfer function 152 between V1 and V2. For example, linearizer 110 may include one or more transistors biased to produce a desired non-linear channel impedance between V1 and V2. Thus, impedance transfer function 154 is non-linear with respect to input voltages VIN from V1 to V2.
As shown in graph 170, gain factor 174 of amplifier 130 deviates from constant gain factor 172 between voltages V1 and V2. For example, amplifier 130 may be a class-C power amplifier having poor linearity between voltages V1 and V2. Thus, gain factor 174 is non-linear with respect to input voltages VIN from V1 to V2.
As shown in graph 190, overall transfer function 194 of system 100, including amplifier 130 with shunt-coupled linearizer 110, is substantially equal to constant transfer function 192 between voltages V1 and V2. The product of impedance transfer function 154 and gain factor 174 may result in an overall transfer function which shows improved linearity between voltages V1 and V2. For example, transistors of linearizer 110 may be biased to produce a non-linear channel impedance of the transistors which cancels out non-linearity in gain factor 174 of amplifier 130 between voltages V1 and V2. Since overall transfer function 194 is the product of impedance transfer function 154 and gain factor 174, overall transfer function 194 shows improved linearity between voltages V1 and V2 compared to gain factor 174.
The inventors have developed linearizers implemented with one or more transistors coupled to an amplifier. For example, the transistors may be coupled to an input of the amplifier with a channel of the transistors configured to provide a non-linear impedance for signals received at the input.
Amplifier 230a comprises transistor 232, which may be configured to amplify a signal received at a control terminal and to provide the amplifier result at a channel terminal coupled to output 204. In the illustrative embodiment of
In the illustrated common-source configuration, transistor 232 is configured to receive the AC signal at its gate, to amplify the AC signal based on a gain factor, and to provide the AC signal with added gain at its drain. For example, the gain factor may be set based on a DC bias voltage at the gate, the drain, and the source of transistor 232, as well as based on current provided by current source 240. The gain factor may be non-linear over a range of AC signal voltages at the gate. Transistor 232 may provide the AC signal with added gain at the drain, which is coupled to output 204.
It should be appreciated that some embodiments do not include current mirror 240. For example, in some embodiments, matching network 242 may be coupled to DC power supply 206. In some embodiments, transistor 232 may receive an input or provide an output to one or more transistors of an additional amplification stage of amplifier 230a. It should be appreciated that transistor 232 may have a different amplifier configuration, such as common-gate or common-drain, for example. Additionally, transistor 232 may be a different type of transistor such as a BJT, HEMT, IGBT, or HBT, and likewise may have a configuration such as common-base, common-emitter, or common-collector suitable to the corresponding type of transistor.
Linearizer 210a is configured to provide a non-linear impedance to compensate amplifier 230a. In
The inventors have developed linearizers which may be implemented with a selectable impedance. For example, one or more transistors of the linearizer may receive a selectable control terminal bias voltage (e.g., a gate bias voltage for a FET or a base bias voltage for a BJT), which allows for selecting an impedance of the linearizer. For instance, the control terminal bias voltage may set a channel impedance of the transistors, which contribute to the impedance of the linearizer. In
The inventors have recognized and appreciated that implementing a linearizer with a selectable impedance may reduce an overall size of the linearizer, thus lowering the manufacturing cost and improving the operating efficiency of the linearizer. In a linearizer without a selectable impedance, an impedance of the linearizer may be set by channel dimensions of devices within the linearizer. For example, the linearizer may include a diode-connected transistor, with an impedance of the linearizer set by a channel size, such as a channel width, of the transistor. To compensate for the non-linear response of the amplifier, the transistor of such a linearizer would need to have approximately a same size channel width as the transistor(s) of the amplifier, so as to match a current density of the amplifier. However, the channel widths of transistors in the amplifier may be large, and so implementing the linearizer to compensate for the amplifier results in an increased manufacturing cost when implemented in an integrated circuit. Additionally, the large transistor channel width results in large internal capacitances of the transistor, requiring more power to turn on the transistor. Accordingly, the linearizer may have a high cost and require more power to operate.
In contrast, a linearizer implemented with a selectable impedance, such as described herein including with reference to
The inventors have developed linearizers which may be implemented including a common-control terminal configured transistor (e.g., common-gate for FETs or common-base for BJTs). For example, in
The inventors have developed linearizers which may be implemented with cascode common-control terminal configured transistors. For example, first and second FETs may be arranged in a common-gate configuration between an input of the amplifier and a DC supply voltage.
Linearizer 210b may be configured to provide a non-linear impedance between input 202 and DC power supply 206 based on DC bias voltages 214a and 214b supplied at control terminals of transistors 212a and 212b. DC bias voltages 214a and 214b may be configured to set a non-linear channel impedance for each of transistors 212a and 212b. DC bias voltages 214a and 214b may be selectable bias voltages for producing a desired non-linear channel impedance for transistors 212a and 212b. Accordingly, an AC signal received at input 202 may be conducted through non-linear channel impedances of transistors 212a and 212b set by DC bias voltages 214a and 214b. It should be appreciated that DC bias voltages 214a and 214b may be a same DC bias voltage, or may be different DC bias voltages.
The inventors have developed linearizers which may be configured for differential systems.
Amplifier 230c may be configured to operate in the manner described for amplifiers 230a and 230b in connection with
Linearizer 210c includes transistor 212a coupled between input 202a and DC power supply 206, and transistor 212b coupled between input 202b and DC power supply 206. Transistors 212a and 212b have control terminals coupled to DC bias voltages 214a and 214b, such that non-linear channel impedances of transistors 212a and 212b may be set according to DC bias voltages 214a and 214b. For example, DC bias voltages 214a and 214b may be selectable bias voltages for producing a desired non-linear channel impedance for transistors 212a and 212b. Transistors 212a and 212b may be substantially equal in size and equivalent in configuration, for example having substantially equal DC bias voltages 214a and 214b, to avoid adding distortion into a differential signal received at inputs 202a and 202b. Distortion in signals provided at control terminals of transistors 232a and 232b of amplifier 230c would result in lower quality signals that may not be intelligible for systems configured to receive the signals provided at outputs 204a and 204b of system 200c.
The inventors have developed linearizers which may be implemented having a same topology as amplifiers for which they are configured to compensate.
Amplifier 330a may have a cascode topology of transistors 332a, 332b, 332c and 332d. Transistors 332a and 332b may have a common-control terminal configuration. For instance, transistors 332a and 332b may be FETs, with gates of the FETs tied to DC bias voltages 334a and 334b. Transistors 332c and 332d may have a common-channel terminal configuration. For example, transistors 332c and 332d may be FETs, with gates of the FETs coupled to inputs 302a and 302b. Drains of the FETs may be coupled to transistors 332a and 332b such that amplifier 330a has a cascode topology.
Linearizer 310a may comprise transistors 312a, 312b, 312c and 312d configured in a cascode topology. Transistors 312a, 312b, 312c and 312d may be biased by DC bias voltages 314a, 314b, 314c and 314d. DC bias voltages 314a and 314b may be substantially equal, and DC bias voltages 314c and 314d may be substantially equal, so as to avoid adding distortion to a signal received at inputs 302a and 302b. In some embodiments, DC bias voltages 314a, 314b, 314c and 314d may all be substantially equal to one another.
The inventors have developed linearizers configured for coupling to inputs and outputs of the amplifiers for which they are configured to compensate.
The inventors have recognized and appreciated that, because signals conducted through linearizer 410a may not experience a frequency shift, such signals may be superimposed at the output of amplifier 430a. Accordingly, system 400a may preserve substantially all of the signal received at input 402 and provide the amplifier signal at output 404. It should be appreciated that, in some embodiments, linearizer 410a may be configured to match a phase shift of amplifier 430a, such that signals received at input 402 reach output 404 through linearizer 410a in phase with signals which reach output 404 through amplifier 430a. In some embodiments, linearizer 410a may be configured to provide a 180 degree phase shift, such that signals received at input 402 may reach output 404 out of phase with signals which reach output 404 through amplifier 430a. In accordance with various embodiments, linearizer 410a may be configured to provide any desired phase shift for signals received at input 402. Additionally, it should be appreciated that, while linearizer 410a and amplifier 430a are illustrated as having a same non-cascode topology, linearizer 410a and amplifier 430a may have different topologies in accordance with various embodiments.
Various aspects of the apparatus and techniques described herein may be used alone, in combination, or in a variety of arrangements not specifically discussed in the embodiments described in the foregoing description and is therefore not limited in its application to the details and arrangement of components set forth in the foregoing description or illustrated in the drawings. For example, aspects described in one embodiment may be combined in any manner with aspects described in other embodiments.
It should be appreciated that the above described transistors may be implemented in any of a variety of ways. For example, one or more of the transistors may be implemented as bipolar junction transistors or field-effect transistors (FETs), such as metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs), junction field-effect transistors (JFETs), heterostructure field-effect transistors (HFETs), heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs), and high electron mobility transistors (HEMTs). In instances where one or more transistors described herein are implemented as BJTs, the gate, source, and drain terminals described above for such transistors may be base, emitter, and collector terminals, respectively.
Additionally, it should be appreciated that amplifiers described herein may comprise multiple cascade stages of common-source, common-control terminal and/or cascode configured transistors. In some embodiments, amplifier 130 may comprise a class C power amplifier. In some embodiments, amplifiers described herein may comprise a power amplifier belonging to any one of classes A, B, AB, C, D, E, F, G and H. In some embodiments, amplifier 130 may comprise a low-noise amplifier.
Additionally, it should be appreciated that illustrated embodiments which omit current mirror 240 may be adapted to include current mirror 240.
Use of ordinal terms such as “first”, “second”, “third”, etc., in the claims to modify a claim element does not by itself connote any priority, precedence, or order of one claim element over another or the temporal order in which acts of a method are performed, but are used merely as labels to distinguish one claim element having a certain name from another element having a same name (but for use of the ordinal term) to distinguish the claim elements.
Also, the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including”, “comprising”, “having”, “containing” or “involving” and variations thereof herein, is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items.
The use of “coupled” or “connected” is meant to refer to circuit elements, or signals, that are either directly linked to one another or through intermediate components.
The terms “approximately”, “substantially,” and “about” may be used to mean within ±20% of a target value in some embodiments, within ±10% of a target value in some embodiments, within ±5% of a target value in some embodiments, and within ±2% of a target value in some embodiments. The terms “approximately” and “about” may include the target value.
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